Lgdi 48 04 26 (085) The Wolf Pack
# The Wolf Pack - Let George Do It
George Valentine's cases don't come much darker than this one. When a frightened socialite stumbles into his office with a warning about "the Wolf Pack"—a ruthless syndicate preying on the city's wealthy elite—our intrepid detective knows he's stumbled onto something that reaches into the highest corridors of power. What follows is a taut descent into blackmail, betrayal, and the kind of danger that doesn't announce itself with gunfire but creeps in like fog off the harbor. The crisp April evening broadcast crackles with genuine menace as George navigates a maze of false leads and dangerous double-crosses, each clue pulling him closer to an organization that would stop at nothing to protect its secrets. By the episode's climax, listeners will find themselves gripping their radio dials, uncertain whether our hero will emerge from this wolf's den alive.
*Let George Do It* occupied a unique niche in the golden age of radio detective fiction. Unlike the wisecracking private eyes of the East Coast airwaves, George Valentine was portrayed as an everyman—resourceful but vulnerable, clever but fallible. Bob Bailey's deadpan delivery became the show's signature, lending authenticity to a character who solved cases almost by accident, through persistence rather than genius. The Mutual network's commitment to sophisticated scripts meant episodes like "The Wolf Pack" could explore morally complex scenarios that reflected genuine post-war anxieties about organized crime and institutional corruption. This 1948 broadcast represents the show at its creative peak, when radio drama was still evolving its vocabulary of suspense.
Tune in now to experience why *Let George Do It* remains the thinking listener's detective program. Even seventy-five years later, George Valentine's world feels disturbingly real.